This document summarizes the key elements and types of contracts under Philippine law. It defines a contract as a meeting of the minds between two parties where one party binds themselves to give or render services to the other. Contracts are classified in several ways, including by perfection (consensual or real), degree of importance (principal, accessory, preparatory), subject matter (things, rights, services), cause (onerous, gratuitous, remuneratory), and risk (commutative, aleatory). Essential requisites of a valid contract are consent, a certain object, and a valid cause. Consent requires an offer and acceptance, with certain rules governing communication and revocation.
This document summarizes the key elements and types of contracts under Philippine law. It defines a contract as a meeting of the minds between two parties where one party binds themselves to give or render services to the other. Contracts are classified in several ways, including by perfection (consensual or real), degree of importance (principal, accessory, preparatory), subject matter (things, rights, services), cause (onerous, gratuitous, remuneratory), and risk (commutative, aleatory). Essential requisites of a valid contract are consent, a certain object, and a valid cause. Consent requires an offer and acceptance, with certain rules governing communication and revocation.
This document summarizes the key elements and types of contracts under Philippine law. It defines a contract as a meeting of the minds between two parties where one party binds themselves to give or render services to the other. Contracts are classified in several ways, including by perfection (consensual or real), degree of importance (principal, accessory, preparatory), subject matter (things, rights, services), cause (onerous, gratuitous, remuneratory), and risk (commutative, aleatory). Essential requisites of a valid contract are consent, a certain object, and a valid cause. Consent requires an offer and acceptance, with certain rules governing communication and revocation.
This document summarizes the key elements and types of contracts under Philippine law. It defines a contract as a meeting of the minds between two parties where one party binds themselves to give or render services to the other. Contracts are classified in several ways, including by perfection (consensual or real), degree of importance (principal, accessory, preparatory), subject matter (things, rights, services), cause (onerous, gratuitous, remuneratory), and risk (commutative, aleatory). Essential requisites of a valid contract are consent, a certain object, and a valid cause. Consent requires an offer and acceptance, with certain rules governing communication and revocation.
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The key takeaways are the different ways contracts can be classified such as according to perfection, degree of importance, subject matter, cause, risk, name, etc. Elements of a contract like consent, object and consideration are also discussed.
The different kinds of contracts according to perfection are consensual contracts which are perfected by mere consent and real contracts which are perfected by delivery of the object of the contract.
The different kinds of contracts according to degree of importance are principal contracts which can stand alone and accessory contracts whose existence and validity depends on another contract.
CONTRACTS
CHAPTER 1: GENERAL PROVISIONS
CONTRACTS is a meeting of the minds between two persons whereby one bids himself, w/respect to other, to give something or to render some services. * MEETING OF THE MINDS exist when there is consent, if the two persons agreed of the object & cost. DISTINGUISH CONTRACTS FROM OBLIGATION & STIPULATION Contract Obligation Stipulation Source of an obligation Legal tie or relation itself that exist after the contract was entered into The dispositive part of a contract which cannot be separated from the principal agreement. This is the cause This is the effect
DIFFERENT KINDS OF CONTRACTS ACCORDING TO PERFECTION A. CONSENSUAL-perfected by mere consent, such as sale and barter. B. REAL-perfected by the delivery of the object of the contract, such as pledge, loan & deposit. ACCORDING TO DEGREE OF IMPORTANCE A. PRINCIPAL-can stand alone, such as sale, barter, deposit & loan. B. ACCESSORY-its existence & validity is dependent upon another contracts, such as pledge, mortgage & guaranty. C. PREPARATORY-contracts is not an end by itself, but a means thru which other contracts may be made. ACCORDING TO SUBJECT MATTER A. Contracts involving things, such as sale & barter. B. Contracts involving rights of credit, such as usufruct or assignment of credit. C. Contracts involving services, such as agency, lease of services & contract of carriage. ACCORDING TO CAUSE A. ONEROUS-there is an exchange of consideration, such as sale, barter & lease. B. GRATUITOUS OR LUCARATIVE-there is no consideration received in exchange for what has been given, such as donation, remission & commodatum. C. REMUNERATORY-something is given for a benefit or serviced performed w/out any legal obligation to do so.
ACCORDING TO RISK A. COMMUTATIVE-where equivalent values are given by both parties, such as sale, barter & lease. B. ALEATORY-where fulfillment of the contract dependent upon chance, such as insurance. KINDS OF CONTRACT ACCORDING TO NAME A. NOMINATE- are those which have an individuality of their own & are governed by special rules of law. B. INNOMINATE-are those w/out any individuality of their own & are not governed by special rules but by general rules of contracts. KINDS OF INNOMINATE CONTRACTS: 1. DO UT DES - I give that you may give. 2. DO UT FACIAS - I give that you may do. 3. FACIO UT DES - I do that you may give. 4. FACIO UT FACIAS- I do that you may do. ELEMENTS OF CONTRACTS ESSENTIAL ELEMENTS-w/out them a contract cannot exist because there is a indispensable requirements. There is a ESSENTIAL ELEMENTS: Consent, object & cost. NATURAL ELEMENTS-these are found in certain contracts & presumed to exist, unless excluded by stipulaton of the parties. Example is implied warranty in a contract of sale ACCIDENTAL EEMENTS-not considered agreed by the parties unless stipulated. Example payment of interest in a contract of loan. STAGES IN THE LIFE OF A CONTRACT o PREPARATION OR CONCEPTION- this is the preparatory step taken by the parties leading to the perfection of the contract, otherwise known as the BARGAINING POINT. o PERFECTION OR BIRTH-the meeting of the minds regarding the subject matter & the cause of the contract. o CONSUMMATION OR DEATH OR TERMINATION-the point in time when the parties have performed their respective obligations & the contract is put to an end. DISTINGUISH AN ORDINARY CONTRACT FROM: A. CONTRACT OF MARRIAGE-in an ordinary contract, the parties may be two or more persons of the same or different sexes, whereby in a marriage contract, it is necessary that the parties must be a man & a woman. Ordinary contract may be terminated by mere agreement of the parties in marriage contract, the termination is w/ the consent of the state. B. OBLIGATION- the contract is the cause, while obligation is the effect. There can be an obligation w/out a contract, but there can be no contract/out an obligation. C. PACT- is an incidental part of a contract which can be separated from the agreement itself. D. STIPULATION-is the dispositive part of a contract which cannot be separated from the principal agreement. BASIC PRINCIPLES OR CHARACTERISTICS OF A CONTRACT Freedom ( or liberty) to stipulate. Obligatory force & compliance in good faith. Perfection by mere consent. Both parties are mutually bound. Relatively binding between the parties only, their assigns & heirs. CONTRACT BY A THIRD PERSON The decision of the third person is not binding until it has been made known to both contracting parties. EXCEPTION TO THE RULE OF RELATIVITY Obligations arising from contract which are not transmissible by their nature, stipulation or provision of law. When a third person induces another to violate his contract. The right of a creditor to sue on a contract entered into by his debtor. Stipulation of POUR AUTRUI- in favor of a third person made by the contracting parties w/ the clear & deliberate intention of conferring a favor upon such third person & whose fulfillment the latter may demand by communicating his acceptance to the obligor before its revocation. REQUISITES OF POUR AUTRUI Stipulation is in favor of a third person. The parties clearly & deliberately conferred the favor to the third person. The stipulation must be a part of the contract. The acceptance of the third person must be communicated to the parties of the contract. CONTRACT OF DEPOSIT-is constituted from the moment a person receives a thing belonging to another, w/the obligation of safety keeping it & of returning the same. CONTRACT OF PLEDGE-is the delivery of a personal property by a debtor to a creditor as security for a debt. CONTRACTS ENTERED INTO IN THE NAME OF ANOTHER as a rule, no one may contract in the name of another, except: A. If the authorized by the person whom he represents. B. If his right to represent is provided by law. UNENFORCEABLE CONTRACTS- contracts entered into in the name of another by one who is not authorized are unenforceable. This defective contract can be the object of ratification. It ratified before revocation, it becomes enforceable. CHAPTER 2: ESSENTIAL REQUISITES OF CONTRACTS There is no contract unless the following requisites concur: Consent of the contracting parties. Object certain which is the subject matter of the contract. Cause of the obligation which is established. SECTION 1: CONSENT CONSENT is the manifestation of meeting of offer & acceptance upon the thing & the cause of the contract. REQUITES OF CONSENT: o Must be given by two or more parties. o Parties are capacitated to contract. o Consent must be intelligently or freely given. o Express manifestation of the will of the contracting parties. EXPEDITION THEORY-the contract is perfected from the moment acceptance is declared or made even if not made known to the offeror. COGNITION THEORY-the contract is perfected from the moment the acceptance comes to the knowledge of the offeror. There is no perfected contract until it has come to the knowledge of the person making the offer. OFFER- Is the proposition or proposal made by one party to another to enter into a contract. It is expression or willingness to bargain for something you desire. REVOCATION OF ACCEPTANCE- the acceptance by the offeree may be revoked before reaching the knowledge of the offeror. If it is revoked, the contract is not perfected if the notice of revocation reaches the offeror before the letter of acceptance is received. ACCEPTANCE IS MADE BY : EXPRESSLY written or oral words can be used in accepting the offer. IMPLIEDLY- when from the acts of offeree, it can be inferred that he is accepting the offer, such as accepting payment of the price of the sale. ACCEPTANCE OF OFFER MADE BY THRU AN AGENT There is no meeting of the minds. If the offer is made thru an agent, the contract is perfected from the time the acceptance of the offeree is communicated to the agent even before it is conveyed to the principal under the principle in agency that the personality of the agent is an extension of that of the principal. The offer & acceptance is communicated thru an agent. EFFECT OF DEATH, INSANITY OF EITHER PARTY BEFORE ACCEPTANCE IS CONVEYED the offer & the acceptance becomes ineffective. OTHER INSTANCES WHEN THE OFFER BECOMES INEFFECTIVE: Rejection of the offer by the offeree. The offeree accepted w/qualification or condition-these will constitute a counter-offer. Before acceptance, the object becomes illegal or unlawful. When the period to accept the offer had lapsed. WHEN TO ACCEPT THE OFFER When there is a period for acceptance, the offer must be accepted at any time until such period expires. If no time is fixed for acceptance & the offer is made to a person present, the acceptance must be made immediately. And if made to person who is absent, the acceptance must be made within such time under normal circumstances, an answer can be received. WITHDRAWAL OF OFFER- The offeror to withdraw the offer at any time before acceptance, even before the period for acceptance has expired. But this right is not absolute, the offer must allow the offeree a sufficient time to decide on the option & to communicate his decision to the offerer. If the offerer disregard the right of the offeree & arbitrarily revokes the offer, he must be held liable for damages which the offeree may suffer. RULE IN CASE OF AN OFFER TO SELL: OPTION CONTRACT one giving a person a certain period within which to accept the offer of the offerer. It also the earnest money or the down payment to the object. OPTION PERIOD- period given within which the offeree must accept the offer. OPTION MONEY- money paid or promised to be paid in consideration for the option. PERSONS INCAPABLE OF GIVING CONSENT: MINORS- the person who have not reached the majority age & are still subject to parental authority DEAF MUTE- who do not know how to write. INSANE or DEMENTED PERSONS- the insanity must exist at the time of contracting. Unless proved otherwise, a person is presumed sane. CONTRACTS WHICH ARE VOIDABLE BY REASON OF INCAPACITY: Contracts entered into by insane or demented persons, unless under lucid interval. Contracts agreed to in a state of drunkenness if there is complete loss of understanding. Contracts entered into during hypnotic spell, those induced by drugs, or state of somnambulism. LUCID INTERVAL Is a temporary period of sanity. This is period of suspension of insanity to sanity. If the contract is entered into during lucid interval, the contract is binding between the parties because voidable contracts are valid until annulled by a proper action in court. OTHER PERSONS DISQUALIFIED BY LAW TO ENTER INTO A CONTRACTS: Hospitalized lepers. Persons suffering the accessory penalty of civil interdiction. Prodigals (spendthrifts). Deaf & dumb who are unable to read & write. Those who are of unsound mind even though they have lucid intervals. Those who, by reason of age, disease, weak mind, & other similar causes, cannot w/out outside aid, take care of themselves & manage their property, becoming thereby an easy prey for deceit & exploitation. VITIATING CONSENT- the consent is not given voluntarily. This is also vices of consent FIVE CAUSES VITIATING CONSENT : o Error or mistake. o Violence or force. o Intimidation or threat. o Undue influence. o Fraud or deceit. MISTAKE OR ERROR- is the false notion of a thing or fact material to the contract. WHEN ERROR VITIATES CONSENT: A. It must be substantial regarding: o Object of contract. o Conditions which principally moved one or both parties to enter into a contract. o Identity or qualification of persons. B. Error must be excusable, not caused by negligence. C. The error must be a mistake of fact & not of law. ERROR WHICH DOES NOT INVALIDATE CONSENT: o Mistake as a quantity or amount does not invalidate consent but only gives rise to its correction. o Error or mistake as regards to the incidents of a thing or accidental quantities thereof, not taken as the principal consideration. o Error or mistake as regards to the motives of the contract, unless the motives constitute a condition or cause of the contract. MISTAKE OF FACT this reiterates that a difficult question of law becomes a question of fact, the consent of the party is vitiated & will render the contract voidable. REQUISITES: There must be mutual error. The error must refer to the legal effect of the agreement. The real purpose of the parties is frustrated. DISTINGUISH VIOLENCE FROM INTIMIDATION. In violence, there is physical contract between persons or there is physical coercion; while in intimidation, there is mental or moral coercion. THERE IS VIOLENCE- when in order to wrest consent, serious or irresistible force is employed. REQUISITES OF VIOLENCE TO VITIATE CONSENT A. Employment of serious or irresistible force. B. The very reason why the contract is entered into. THERE IS INTIMIDATION-when one of the contracting parties is compelled by a reasonable & well-grounded fear of an imminent & grave evil upon his persons or property, or upon the person or property of his spouse, descendants or ascendants, to give his consent. REQUISITES FOR INTIMIDATION TO VITIATE CONSENT A. Reasonable & well grounded fear. B. Of an imminent an grave evil. C. Upon his person, property or upon the persons or property of his spouse, descendants or ascendants. D. The very reason why the contract is entered into. E. The threat must be of an unjust act, or actionable wrong. VIOLENCE OR INTIMIDATION MADE BY THIRD PERSON-when violence or intimidation is caused by third person, the contract is voidable because the consent is also vitiated. UNDUE INFLUENCE- Is influenced by a kind that so over-powers the mind of a party as to destroy his free will & make him express the will of another, rather his own. REQUISITES OF UNDUE INFLUENCE TO VITIATE CONSENT A. Taking improper advantage. B. Over the will of another person. C. Depriving the person of a reasonable freedom of choice. There is fraud when, through insidious words or machinations of one of the contracting parties, the other is induced to enter into a contract which, without them, he would not have agreed. KINDS OF FRAUD (DOLO) INCIDENTAL FRAUD- dolo incidente: committed after the perfection of contract, the right of the party is to ask for DAMAGES. CAUSAL FRAUD- dolo causante: committed before or at the time of perfection, the right is to ask for ANNULMENT OF CONTRACT. REQUISITES OF FRAUD TO VITIATE CONSENT: A. The fraud must be serious. B. The party must not be in pari- delicto, that is, it should not have been employed by both contracting parties. If both are at fault, the court will not entertain them under the principle he who comes to court must do so w/ clean hands. C. There must be deliberate intent to deceive or to induce. D. The other party relied on his untrue statement. DOLO CAUSANTE & DOLO INCIDENTE MAY BE DISTINGUISHED FROM ECAH OTHER IN THE FF.WAYS: A. The first refer to fraud which is serious in character, whereas the second is not serious. B. The first is the cause which induces the party upon whom it is employed en entering into a contract, whereas the second is not the cause. C. The effect of the first is to render the contract voidable, whereas the effect of the second is to render the party who employed it liable for damages. WHAT IS CAVEAT EMPTOR? is the transaction fraudulent? Let the buyer beware. The transaction is not fraudulent because this is considered tolerable fraud. Exaggerations in trade, when the other party had an opportunity to know the facts, are not in themselves fraudulent. This is otherwise known as DEALERS TALK. Except of course, if the opinion is made by an expert & the other party has relied on such statement. MISPRESENTATION BY A THIRD PERSON As a rule, the misrepresentation of a third person does not constitute error that will make the contract voidable, except: A. The mispresentation has created substantial mistake. B. The mistake is mutual. SIMULATION- it is declaration of a fictitious intent manifested deliberately & by agreement by the parties in order to produce, for purposes of deceiving others, the appearance of a transaction which does not exist or which is different from their true agreement. KINDS OF EFFECT OF SIMULATION: A. ABSOLUTE- when the parties do not intended to be bound void from the beginning(not valid). B. RELATVE- parties conceal their true agreement. When not prejudicial to the third person & not intended for any purpose contrary to law, morals, good customs, public order or public policy, binds the parties to their real agreement (valid).
SECTION 2: OBJECT OF CONTRACTS Is its subject matter. The object of every contract is the obligation created. But since a contract cannot exist w/out an obligation, it may be said that the thing, service, or right which is the object of the obligation is also the object of the contract. OBJECT OF CONTRACT : A. The thing must be within the commerce of men. B. Future goods. C. Licit. CHARACTERISTIC OF CONTRACTS : A. The thing must be within the commerce of men. B. Transmissible. C. Possible. D. Determinate. RULES IN A CONTRACT OF SALES AS TO FUTURE THINGS: A. Under a contract of sale, things having potential existence may be the object of a contract of sale. B. There may be a sale of expected things, but subject to the condition that it will come into existence. If the will not materialize, the sale is not effective. This is sale of future things ( emptio rei speratae). C. There may be sale of hope itself, the hope or expectancy already exists. This called sale of hope ( emptio spei). However, sale of vain hope or expectancy is void. FUTURE INHERITANCE- the source of property is still alive cannot be the object of a contract, except in cases provided by the law. SECTION 3 CAUSE OF CONTRACTS The cause of a contract is the why of the contract, essential reason which impels the contracting parties to enter into the contract. REQUISITES OF CAUSE: A. It must exist. B. It must be real, that is, true. C. It must be lawful. KINDS OF CONTRACTS ACCORDING TO CAUSE A. ONEROUS- is the one the cause which, for each contracting party, is the presentation or promise of a thing or service by the other, or the promise that the parties are reciprocally obligated to each other. B. REMUNERATORY- one the cause of the which is service or benefited which is remunerated. C. GRATUITOUS- one the cause of which is the mere liberality of the benefactor or giver. MOTIVE- the psychological, individual & personal reason which induces a party to enter into a contract. DISTINGUISH CAUSE FROM MOTIVE: A. Cause is the immediate, direct & most proximate reason; while motive is the indirect & remote reason. B. Cause is the objective, intrinsic reason of the contract; motive is the individual & purely personal reason of the contract. C. The motive may be unknown to the other, the cause is always known. D. The motive may be lawful or unlawful, the cause must always be lawful. FALSITY OF CAUSE & ITS EFFECT the cause is false if it is fictitious or simulated. If the cause is false, it does not follow that the contracts is void. It is considered only as a voidable contract because if it can be proved that there is another cause which is true & lawful, the contract is binding. RULES IN THE STATEMENT OF FALSE CAUSE: o If the cause stated in the contract is false, the parties are given a chance to show that a cause really exists, & that said cause is true & lawful. o The contract therefore is not void, but only voidable or revocable. DIFFERENTIATE WANT OF CAUSE FROM ILLEGAL CAUSE & FALSE CAUSE: Want of cause- there is a total lack or absence of consideration. Illegal cause-the cause is contrary to law, morals, good custom, public order or public policy. False cause-the caused is stated but that cause is not true. LESION is the insufficiency or inadequacy of the cause of a contract. RULES WHEN THERE IS LESION :As a rule, the contract is valid, except when there is: A. Fraud. B. Mistake, or C. Undue influence. EFFECT IF THE CAUSE IS INADEQUATE- the contract remains to be valid because lesion or inadequacy of cause shall not invalidate a contract, unless there has been fraud, mistake or undue influence. CHAPTER 3 FORMS OF CONTRACTS As a rule, the moment the three (3) essential elements of a contract are present, the contract is valid & enforceable even if it is orally entered into. This is called spiritual system of the Spanish civil code by virtue of which the law looks more at the spirit rather than the form of contracts. FORMS OF CONTRACTS - Refers to the manner in which a contract is executed or manifested. The contract may be written or oral or partly oral, or in partly in writing. If in writing, it may be in a public or a private instrument. FORM IS REQUIRED BY LAW IN EITHER OF THREE WAYS: A. VALIDITY the form required or specified by law is essential, otherwise the contract is without effect. B. ENFORCEABILITY- requires the contract to be in writing subscribed by the parties to be charge for its enforcement as against such party, as in the case of contracts covered by the statue frauds. C. CONVENIENCE- requires a certain form in order to make effective the rights against third persons. But as between the parties, it is no longer necessary because the law allows them to compel each other to put in the proper form. The following must appear in a public instrument or document: A. Acts & contracts which have for their object the creation, transmission, modification, or extinguished of real rights over immovable property. B. The cession, repudiation or renunciation of hereditary rights or of those of the conjugal partnership of gains. C. The power to administer property, or any other power which has for its object an act appearing o which should appear in a public document, or should prejudice a third person. D. The cession of actions or rights proceeding from an act appearing in a public document. CHAPTER 4 REFORMATION OF INSTRUMENTS The remedy in equity by means of which a written instruments is made or construed so as to express or conform to the real intention of the parties when some error or mistake has been committed. PURPOSE OF REFORMATION to enforce a written instrument which does not reflect or disclose the real meeting of the minds of the parties would be unjust & inequitable, so the law allows the parties the doctrine of reformation. REQUISITES OF REFORMATION: A. Meeting of the minds. B. Instrument does not express the true intention of the parties. C. There must be clear & convincing proof. MUTUAL MISTAKE Is mistake of fact that is common to both parties of the instrument which causes failure of the instrument to express their true intention. REQUISITES OF MISTAKE: A. The mistake is the mistake of fact. B. Proof must be clear & convincing. C. The alleged mistake must be common to both contracting parties. UNILATERAL MISTAKE- if the mistake is unilateral & the other party acted fraudulently or inequitably , or is guilty of concealment, the party who was mistaken can ask for reformation. NOT SUBJECT TO REFORMATION: Simple donations inter vivos wherein no condition is imposed; Wills; When the real agreement is void. PERSONS TO FILE AN ACTION FOR REFORMATION: A. If mistake is mutual, either party or his successors in interest. B. If not mutual: 1. This injured part, or 2. His heirs & assigns.
CHAPTER 5 INTERPRETATION OF CONTRACTS INTERPRETATION interpretation of a contract is the determination of the meaning of the terms or words used by the parties in their contract. RULE IN CASE OF CONFLICT- Whenever there is a conflict between the words used in the contract & of that of the intention of the parties, the intention must prevail. The words appearing in the contract shall only be given weight when they are so clear that there is no doubt w/ regard to the intention of the parties. Should there be a doubt, the intention must prevail. DOUBT AS TO INCIDENTAL CIRCUMTANCES OF THE CONTRACT: A. IF ONEROUS-in favor of the greatest reciprocity of interest. B. IF GRATUITUS-in favor of the least transmission of rights.
CHAPTER 6 RESCISSIBLE CONTRACTS
According towel known Spanish commentator, Scaevola, is a process to render inefficacious a contract validly entered into & normally binding, by reason of external conditions, causing an economic prejudice to a party or to his creditor. According to Supreme court, rescission is a relief to protect one of the parties or a third person from all injury & damages which the contract may cause, to protect some preferential right. Rescission contracts are those validity agreed upon because all the essential elements exist &, therefore, legally effective, but in the cases established by law, the remedy of rescission is granted in the interest of equity. REQUISITES OF RESCISSION : A. The contract entered into is essentially valid. B. There is lesion or pecuniary prejudice. FOUR KINDS OF DEFECTIVE CONTRACTS ARE: A. RESCISSIBLE CONTRACTS-valid until rescinded. The defect is extrinsic defect consisting of an economic damages or lesion. B. VOIDABLE CONTRACTS-valid until annulled. Annullable unless ratified. If ratified, the contract is cleansed of its defect. This contract is effective now, but may be invalidated. C. UENFORCEABLE CONTRACTS- cannot be sued upon or enforced unless it is ratified. These are validable contracts. No effect now, but they may be effective upon ratification. D. VOID CONTRACT-is one that has no effect at all. It cannot be ratified or validated. This is also called INTEXISTENT CONTRACTS. RESCISSIBLE CONTRACTS EXEMPLIFIED: A. Those entered into by guardians whenever the wards whom they represent suffer lesion by more than one-fourth of the value of the things which are the object. B. The contract agreed upon In representation of absentee. C. Those undertaken in fraud of creditors when the latter cannot in any manner collect claims due them. D. Those property under the litigation. E. All other LESION- defined as the injury suffered, in consequence of inequality of situation, by one who does not receive the full equivalent for what he gave in a commutative contract. o PAYMENT- must have been made for obligations to whose fulfillment the debtor could not be compelled at the time they were effected. REQUISITES OF PREMATURE PAYMENT: A. The debtor, or the person paying must be in the state of insolvency. B. The debt is not yet due or demandable. NATURE OF ACTION OF RESCISSION: Rescission is not a principal remedy. It is only subsidiary, meaning it can be availed of only if the injured party proves that he has no other legal means aside from rescinding the contract to obtain redress for the damage caused. REQUISITES FOR RESCISSION OF CONTRACTS IN FRAUD OF CREDITORS: A. The existence of a credit; B. That said credit must be prior to the contract to be rescinded; C. The existence of fraud or bad faith on the part of the debtor which can either be presumed or proved; and D. The creditors cannot recover their credits in any other manner. BADGES OF FRAUD: A. The fact that the consideration of the conveyance is fictitious or inadequate. B. A transfer made by a debtor after suit has begun & while it is pending against him. C. A sale on credit by an insolvent debtor. D. Evidence of large indebtedness or complete insolvency. E. Transfer of all or nearly all of his property by a debtor, especially when he is insolvent or greatly embarrassed financially. F. The fact that the transfer is made between father & son, when the above circumstances are present. G. The failure of the vendee to take exclusive possession of all the property. H. Gross disparity between the price & real value of the property. PRESUMPTION OF FRAUD IN A RESCISSIBLE CONTRACT: A. GRATUITOUS CONTRACTS- contracts entered into by the debtor when he did not reserve sufficient property to pay his debts before donation, are considered fraudulent. B. ONEROUS CONTRACT- 1. Made by a persons against whom some judgment has been rendered even if not yet final. 2. Made by a persons against whom some writ of attachment has been issued. The decision or attachment need not refer to the property alienated. ESSENTIAL FEATURE OF RESCISSIBLE CONTRACTS: A. The action for rescission is subsidiary. It cannot be instituted except when the party suffering damages has no other legal means to obtain reparation for the same. B. Rescission shall be only to the extent necessary to cover the damage caused. C. Rescission creates the obligation to return the things which were the object of the contract, together w/the fruits & the price w/interest. Consequently, it can be carried out only when he who demands rescission can return whatever he may be obliged to restore. D. The action to claim rescission must be commenced within four years. EFFECTS OF BAD FAITH IN CASE OF ALIENATION: A. First transfer. 1. The transferee must return or indemnify. 2. Loss due to any cause includes fortuitous event. B. Subsequent transfer. 1. If the first transferee is in good faith, the good faith or bad faith of the next transferee is not important. 2. If the first transferee is in bad faith, the next transferee is liable only if he is also in bad faith. PRESCRIPTIVE PERIOD OF RESCISSION Action for rescission shall be commenced within four (4) years from the date it was entered into: A. If the person is under guardianship, within in four (4) years from the time guardianship ceases. B. In case of absentees-within four (4) years from the time the domicile is known. THE FOLLOWING PERSONS CAN BRING THE ACTION FOR RESCISSION: A. The injured party. B. The heirs of the injured party. C. Creditors, if the transaction is fraudulent. CHAPTER 7 VOIDABLE CONTRACTS Those which possess the essential requirements of a valid contract but one of the parties is incapable of giving consent, or consent is vitiated by mistake, violence, intimidation, undue influence or fraud. NULLITY it is that imperfection of a contract derived from the determinate vices of capacity, or of the consent of the parties which gives rise to an action of nullity, which if exercised successfully, produces the destruction of the act with retroactive effect. CONTRACT ARE VOIDABLE OR ANNULLABLE EVEN THOUGH THERE MAY HAVE BEEN NO DAMAGE TO THE CONTRACTING PARTIES: A. Those where one of the parties is incapable of giving consent to a contract. B. Those where the consent is vitiated by mistake, violence, intimidation, undue influence or fraud. These contracts are binding, unless they are annulled by a proper action in court. They are susceptible of ratification. DISTUISH RESCISSIBLE FROM VOIDABLE CONTRACTS: Rescissible Contract Voidable Contract The basis is lesion or damage. It is vitiated consent or incapacity to consent. The basis is external. It is intrinsic; in the meeting of minds. The action is subsidiary. The action is principal. Is a remedy. Is a sanction. There must be damage to the plaintiff. Damage is immaterial. To prevent rescission,ratification is not requires Ratification is allowed.
VOIDABLE CONTRACTS & UNENFORCEABLE CONTRACTS DISTINGUISHED: Voidable contract Unenforceable contract Valid & enforceable until annulled. Not enforceable unless ratified. Capable of being sued upon until annulled. Cannot be sued upon unless they are ratified.
VOIDABLE CONTRACTS & VOID AB INITIO CONTRACTS DISTUISHED:
Voidable Contract Void ab initio contract Valid until annulled by a proper action in court. No court is required. All essential requisites are present but there is a defect in the consent. Not an essential requisites are present either the consent is missing or fictitious, or there is want of cause or the cause is illicit. Susceptible of ratification. Cannot be ratified. Can be attacked only by the parties & their privies Can be attacked by third persons whose interests are directly affected. The action to declare the nullity prescribes. The action to declare a contract does not prescribe.
EFFECT OF PRESCRIPTION- the action for annulment must commence within four (4) years, otherwise the action will prescribe. Hence, the contract can no longer be set aside. CONFIRMATION- is the act of purging the voidable contracts of its through the renunciation of the action of nullity made by the person who can invoke the vice or defect of said contracts. ACKNOWLEDGEMENT- is the act of curing the deficiency of proof as when in a document whereby an agreement made verbally is admitted or a private document is made a public document. RATIFICATION- is that which cures the defect of the contracts celebrated in the name of another without authority or in excess of authority. KINDS OF RATIFICATION: A. Express ( oral or written). B. Tacit (implied). REQUISITES OF RATIFICATION : A. The contract must be voidable. B. The person ratifying knew the reason why the contract is voidable. C. The ratification must be have been made expressly o impliedly. D. The ratification is made by the injured party. THE PERSONS WHO CAN FILE ACTION FOR ANNULLMENT: A. FOR INCAPACITY- the person incapacited. B. FOR VITIATED CONSENT- the injured party. LOSS OF THE THING WHILE IN THE POSSESSION OF THE PARTY AT FAULT: A. If due to his fault: 1. To return the value of the thing at the time of loss. 2. Interest on the value of the thing. 3. Fruits received. B. If due to fortuitous event: 1. The value of the thing at the time of loss but no interest. 2. Fruits received. LOSS OF THE THING WHILE IN THE POSSESSION OF THE PARTY WHO CAN ANNUL THE CONTRACTS: A. IF DUE TO HIS FAULT- the right to annul is extinguished. In short, the party has no more right to annul. B. IF DUE TO A FORTUITOUS EVENT- the contract can still be annulled, unless if the innocent party could no longer restore what, by virtue of the decree of annulment, he is bound to return. MUTUAL RESTITUTION- if a voidable contract is annulled, the parties shall return to each other what they have received. Such that if one cannot restore what he is required to return, the other cannot be compelled to return what he received. CHAPTER 8 UNENFORCEABLE CONTRACTS Those that cannot be enforced in court or sued upon by reason of defects provided by law until & unless they are ratified according to law. CONCEPT: An unenforceable contract is one which cannot be enforced unless it is first ratified. These are called contracts without effect, but if ratified, they are valid contracts. Sometimes, these are called validable contracts. DISTINGUISH UNENFORCEABLE FROM VOIDABLE & RESCISSIBLE CONTRACTS: Voidable & rescissible are valid & binding until annulled or rescinded, while unenforceable contracts are without effect unless ratified. KINDS OF UNENFORCEABLE CONTRACTS: A. Those executed by one in the name of another without any authority or in excess of such authority. B. Those that do not comply the statue of frauds. C. Those were both parties are incapable of giving consent. UNATHORIZED OR DISAUTHORIZED CONTRACTS- contracts entered into the name of another person by one who has been given no authority or legal representation or who as acted his power are unenforceable unless ratified. STATUE OF FRAUDS-it is a law, which requires that certain contracts must be in writing, otherwise, unenforceable. PURPOSE: To aid human memory, to prevent the commission of injustice due to faulty memory & to discourage intentional mispresentations, are the principal aims of the statue of frauds. FORM REQUIRED: Contracts falling under the statue of frauds are required to be in writing or there should be a note or memorandum subscribed by the party charged, or his agent. Failure to execute the contracts in writing does not render the contract void but only unenforceable. APPLICATION: Statue of Frauds is applicable only to executor contracts & not to contracts totally or partially executed. CONTRACTS COVERED BY STATUE OF FRAUDS: A. An agreement by its terms is not to be performed within a year from the making thereof. B. A special promise to answer for the debt, default or miscarriage of another. C. An agreement made in consideration of marriage other than mutual promise to marry. D. An agreement for the sale of goods, chattels, or things in action at a price of five hundred pesos or more. E. An agreement for the leasing for a longer period than one year, or the sale of real property or an interest therein. F. A representation as to the credit of a third person. SUFFICIENCY OF THE NOTE OR MEMORANDUM- the note or memorandum is sufficient if it contains the name of the contracting parties, the date, the place of the contract, the term & condition, the description of the object, & the signature of the party assuming the obligation. RATIFICATION OF CONTRACTS FALLING UNDER THE STATUE OF FRAUDS: A. Failure to object to the presentation of oral evidence. B. Acceptance of benefit under them. Hence, if the contract is partially or totally executed, Statue of Frauds will not apply. ACTS CONSIDERED AS PARTIAL PERFORMANCE: A. Possession. B. Payment of taxes. C. Improving the property. D. Tender of payment followed by surveying the lot at the expense of the buyer. RIGHT OF THE PARTY TO COMPEL THE OTHER TO EXECUTED THE NEEDED INSTRUMENT When a public instrument is required for mere convenience of the parties, the same may compel each other to execute the necessary document, but only if the following elements are present: A. The contract must be valid. B. The contract is enforceable. CONTRACT WHERE BOTH PARTIES ARE INCAPACITATED- if both parties are incapacitated, the contract is unenforceable but can be ratified to make it enforceable. HOW CONTRACTS RATIFIED IF BOTH PARTIES ARE INCAPACITATED: A. Expressly or implied by the parent or guardian of one of the parties making the contract voidable. B. If both parents or guardian of the contracting parties ratified the contract, I becomes enforceable, validated from inception. WHO MAY SET UP THE DEFENSE OF UNENFORCEABILITY- the defense is available only to the contracting parties & their heirs. A stranger therefore cannot attack the unenforceability of a contract, in like manner that a stranger in a contract cannot attack the validity of a voidable contract. WAIVER- the defense of the Statue of Frauds is a personal defense. It can be relied only by the parties or personal representative. However, it can be waived by the parties thereto. CHAPTER 9 VOID OR INEXISTENT CONTRACTS VOID CONTRACTS-these are the contracts which have absolutely no force & effect & are inexistent from the beginning. The maxim is no contract at all. KINDS OF VOID CONTRACTS: A. The inexistent ones. The formalities required by law were not met. The contract has no effect at all. B. The illegal or illicit ones. CHARACTERISTICS OF VOID CONTRACT: A. Defense of illegality cannot be waived. B. They are not subject to ratification. C. The action to declare the contract inexistent does not prescribe. D. Generally, no action to declare them void is needed. E. The defense of illegality of contracts is not available to third persons whose interests are not directly affected. A VOID OR INEXISTENT CONTRACT MAY BE DISTUINHED FROM A RESCISSIBLE CONTRACT IN THE FOLLOWING WAYS: A. A void or inexistent contract produces as a rule, no effect, even if it is not set aside by a direct action, whereas a rescissible contratcs is valid unless it is rescinded. B. The defect of the former consists in absolute lack in fact or in law of one or some or all of the essential elements of a contract, whereas the defect of the latter consists in lesion or damages to one of the contracting parties or the third persons. C. The action for the declaration of the nullity or inexistence of a contract is imprescriptible, whereas the action for the rescission of a contract is prescriptible. D. The nullity or inexistence of a contract cannot, as a rule, be assailed by third persons whose interests are not directly affected, whereas the rescissible character of a contract may be assailed by third persons. A VOID CONTRACT MAY BE DISTUISHED FROM A VOIDABLE CONTRACT IN THE FOLLOWING WAYS: A. A void or inexistent contract produces, as a rule, no effect even if it is not set aside by a direct action, whereas a voidable contract is binding unless it is annulled. B. The former is not susceptible of ratification, whereas the latter is susceptible of ratification. C. The action for declaration of the nullity or inexistence of a contract is imprescriptible, whereas the action for the annulment of a contract is prescriptible. D. The defense of inexistence or absolute nullity is available to third persons whose interest are directly affected, whereas the defense of annulability is not available to third persons. A VOID CONTRACT MAY BE DISTUINGED FROM AN UNENFORCEABLE CONTRACT IN THE FOLLOWING WAYS: A. In a void or inexistent contract, there is in law or in reality no contract at all, whereas in an unenforceable contract, there is actually a contract which cannot be enforced by a court action unless it is ratified. B. The former is not susceptible of ratification, while the latter is susceptible of ratification. C. The former cab be assailed by third persons whose interests are directly affected, whereas the latter cannot be assailed by third persons. SIMULATED CONTRACTS- simulation takes place when the parties do not really want the contract they have executed to produce the legal effects expressed by its wordings. Simulation or vices of declaration maybe absolute or relatve. An absolutely simulated contract of sale is void ab initio & transfer no ownership right. The purported buyer, not being the owner, cannot validly mortgage the subject property. Consequently neither does the buyer at the foreclosure sale acquire any title thereto. EFFECT OF CONTRACT WHERE THERE IS A CRIMINAL OFFENSE: 1. THOSE WHERE BOTH PARTIES ARE GUILTY: Examples: sale of opium. EFFECTS: A. No right of action against each other. B. Both will be prosecuted. C. Effects or instrument of the crime will be confiscated in favor of the government. 2. ONLY ONE PARTY IS GUILTY Examples: S sold a government property to B, who is in good faith. EFFECTS: A. The guilty party will be prosecuted. B. Property sold, as the instrument of the crime, will be confiscated in favor of the government. C. Innocent party can claim what he has given. EFFECT OF CONTRACTS WHERE THERE IS NO CRIMINAL INTENT: A. Those where both parties are guilty neither party may recover what he has given by virtue of the contract or demand the performance of the others undertaking. B. Those when only one is guilty or at fault, or one party is less guilty than the other: 1. The guilty party cannot recover what he has given by reason of the contract, or ask for the fulfillment of what has been promised him. 2. The party not at fault may demand the return of what he has given, without any obligation to comply with his promise. PRINCIPLE OF IN PARI DELICTO Where the defect of void contract is the illegality of the cause or object of the contract, both parties are at fraud or in pari delicto. No remedy could be given to any of the parties,& the court leaves them where they are. This is a universally accepted principle in law under the maxim he who comes to court must do so w/clean hands. SOME EXCEMPTIONS: A. Fictitious or absolute simulated contracts because they are inexistent. B. Payment of usurious interest, the law allows recovery of the principal & the legal interest. C. When public policy intervenes. D. Payment of any amount in excess of the maximum price of any article or commodity fixed by law, the buyer may recover the excess. E. One of the parties in a contract is less guilty than the other. RATES OF INTEREST: The permissible rates of interest according to Usury law are: A. 12% per annum, secured loans with registered real property as security. B. 14% per annum, for unsecured loans. C. For licensed pawnbrokers: 1. 2-1/2% per month- for loan less than P500. 2. 2% per month- between P500 & P 2,000. 3. 14% per annum- for loans over P2,000. EFFECT OF USURIOUS TRANSACTION- if the transaction is usurious, the debtor may recover in excess of Usury law, with interest from the date of payment. EXEMTION OF THE PARI DELICTO RULE When money is paid or property delivered for an illegal purpose, the contract may be repudiated by one of the parties before the purpose has been accomplished, or before any damages has been caused to a third person. The courts are given discretionary powers to allow recovery or not. RECOVERY COULD ONLY MADE ONLY IF: A. The purpose has not yet been accomplished. B. Damage has not been caused to third person. ILLEGAL PER SE CONTRACTS- are those forbidden contracts because of public interest. THE MERELY PROHIBITED CONTRACTS - These contracts are also forbidden because of private interest. There may be recovery: A. If the contract is not illegal per se. B. C. plaintiff. D. Public policy will be enhanced by allowing the recovery. PAYMENT IN EXCESS OF THAT ALLOWED BY LAW IS RECOVERABLE- to curb the evils of profiteering, any person paying an amount in excess of that allowed by law may recover such excess. The maximum number of hours of work is eight (8) hours a day. The minimum wage of an employee a day is P404.00. MINIMUM WAGE- no waiver is right. ILLEGAL TERM OF THE CONTRACTS: A. If indivisible, the whole contract is void, even if only some parts or terms are illegal. B. If divisible, the legal terms may be enforced if they can be separated from the illegal terms.
The defense of illegality of contracts, as a rule, is not available to third persons. Thus, such third persons have no legal personality to interfere in any court proceeding. EFFECT OF THE CONTRACT EXECUTED WHICH IS A DIRECT RESULT OF A PREVIOUS ILLEGAL CONTRACTS- If a new contract is executed & it is a direct result of a previous contract, the effect of such contract is void & inexistent. KINDS OF OBLIGATIONS FROM THE VIEWPOINT OF SANCTION: A. CIVIL OBLIGATIONS - Those obligation whereby the creditors are given a right of action to compel their performance. B. NATURAL OBLIGATION- They are not based on positive law but on equity. They do not grant a right of action to enforce their performance but after voluntary fulfillment by the obligor, they authorize the retention of what has been delivered or rendered by reason thereof. VOLUNTARY- the term voluntary is understood to mean the execution of an act free from coercion or compulsion. The act is voluntary or thru his own free will, w/ knowledge that the other party cannot compel his anymore, yet he executes the act of willfully. Therefore, if payment or delivery of money as payment is made thru a court process, natural obligation cannot be made to apply because this is not voluntary fulfillment. PERIOD OF EXTINCTIVE PRESCRIPTION: A. IF ORAL CONTRACT- the prescriptive period is six (6) years. B. IF WRITTEN CONTRACT-the prescriptive period is ten (10) years. PAYMENT BY THIRD PERSON if the obligation is paid by a third person without the knowledge or against the will of the debtor, but such debt has already prescribed before payment is made, & subsequently the debtor reimburses the third person, the obligor- the debtor in this case cannot recover anymore what he has paid. PAYMENT OF LEGACY IN A VOID WILL If the will or last will & testament is void. The legacy would also be void, & the deceased is considered to have died intestate, that is, without any will. The property, thereof, will be distributed according to law because he died intestate.